inmost nature
1inmost nature — index center (essence), essence Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
2inner nature — Synonyms and related words: bosom, breast, center, center of life, core, deepest recesses, esoteric reality, heart, heart of hearts, inmost heart, inmost soul, inner, inner landscape, inner life, inner man, inner recess, inner self, inside,… …
3center — I (central position) noun axis, center of gravity, central point, convergence, converging point, core, epicenter, equidistance, eye, focal point, focus, focus of attention, fulcrum, half distance, halfway, media pars, medius, middle, middle… …
4Scientific method — …
5essence — es·sence / es əns/ n 1: the real or ultimate nature of a thing: the properties that make a thing what it is his award is legitimate only so long as it draws its essence from the collective bargaining agreement United Steel Workers v. Enterprise… …
6essence — I. n. 1. nature, substance, quintessence, essential part, central nature, inmost nature or substance, vital element or part. 2. Extract, volatile part, rectified portion. 3. Odor, perfume, scent. 4. Being, existence, entity, nature. II. v. a.… …
7music — musicless, adj. /myooh zik/, n. 1. an art of sound in time that expresses ideas and emotions in significant forms through the elements of rhythm, melody, harmony, and color. 2. the tones or sounds employed, occurring in single line (melody) or… …
8Mr. Cogito — is a character created by Zbigniew Herbert, a Polish poet and essayist. He first appears in a poem entitled The Envoy of Mr. Cogito ( Przesłanie Pana Cogito ) published in 1973. Initially Mr. Cogito was an Everyman, a universal element of… …
9SCHOPENHAUER, ARTHUR — a bold metaphysical thinker, born in Danzig, of Dutch descent; was early dissatisfied with life, and conceived pessimistic views of it; in 1814 jotted down in a note book, Inward discord is the very bane of human nature so long as a man lives …
10SCIENCE — as it has been said, has for its province the world of phenomena, and deals exclusively with their relations, consequences, or sequences. It can never tell us what a thing really and intrinsically is, but only why it has become so; it can only …